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Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                         R. MurrayRequest for Comments: 8007                              B. Niven-JenkinsCategory: Standards Track                                          NokiaISSN: 2070-1721                                            December 2016Content Delivery Network Interconnection (CDNI)Control Interface / TriggersAbstract   This document describes the part of the Content Delivery Network   Interconnection (CDNI) Control interface that allows a CDN to trigger   activity in an interconnected CDN that is configured to deliver   content on its behalf.  The upstream CDN can use this mechanism to   request that the downstream CDN pre-position metadata or content or   to request that it invalidate or purge metadata or content.  The   upstream CDN can monitor the status of activity that it has triggered   in the downstream CDN.Status of This Memo   This is an Internet Standards Track document.   This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force   (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has   received public review and has been approved for publication by the   Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Further information on   Internet Standards is available inSection 2 of RFC 7841.   Information about the current status of this document, any errata,   and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained athttp://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8007.Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2016 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the   document authors.  All rights reserved.   This document is subject toBCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal   Provisions Relating to IETF Documents   (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of   publication of this document.  Please review these documents   carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect   to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must   include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of   the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as   described in the Simplified BSD License.Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                    [Page 1]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 2016Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................31.1. Terminology ................................................42. Model for CDNI Triggers .........................................42.1. Timing of Triggered Activity ...............................62.2. Scope of Triggered Activity ................................72.2.1. Multiple Interconnected CDNs ........................72.3. Trigger Results ............................................83. Collections of Trigger Status Resources .........................94. CDNI Trigger Interface .........................................104.1. Creating Triggers .........................................114.2. Checking Status ...........................................124.2.1. Polling Trigger Status Resource Collections ........124.2.2. Polling Trigger Status Resources ...................134.3. Canceling Triggers ........................................134.4. Deleting Triggers .........................................144.5. Expiry of Trigger Status Resources ........................144.6. Loop Detection and Prevention .............................154.7. Error Handling ............................................154.8. Content URLs ..............................................165. CI/T Object Properties and Encoding ............................175.1. CI/T Objects ..............................................175.1.1. CI/T Commands ......................................175.1.2. Trigger Status Resources ...........................185.1.3. Trigger Collections ................................205.2. Properties of CI/T Objects ................................215.2.1. Trigger Specification ..............................215.2.2. Trigger Type .......................................235.2.3. Trigger Status .....................................245.2.4. PatternMatch .......................................245.2.5. Absolute Time ......................................255.2.6. Error Description ..................................265.2.7. Error Code .........................................266. Examples .......................................................276.1. Creating Triggers .........................................286.1.1. Preposition ........................................286.1.2. Invalidate .........................................306.2. Examining Trigger Status ..................................326.2.1. Collection of All Triggers .........................326.2.2. Filtered Collections of Trigger Status Resources ...336.2.3. Individual Trigger Status Resources ................346.2.4. Polling for Changes in Status ......................366.2.5. Deleting Trigger Status Resources ..................386.2.6. Error Reporting ....................................39Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                    [Page 2]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 20167. IANA Considerations ............................................407.1. CDNI Payload Type Parameter Registrations .................407.2. "CDNI CI/T Trigger Types" Registry ........................417.3. "CDNI CI/T Error Codes" Registry ..........................418. Security Considerations ........................................41      8.1. Authentication, Authorization, Confidentiality,           Integrity Protection ......................................428.2. Denial of Service .........................................438.3. Privacy ...................................................449. References .....................................................449.1. Normative References ......................................449.2. Informative References ....................................45Appendix A. Formalization of the JSON Data ........................47   Acknowledgments ...................................................49   Authors' Addresses ................................................491.  Introduction   [RFC6707] introduces the problem scope for Content Delivery Network   Interconnection (CDNI) and lists the four categories of interfaces   that may be used to compose a CDNI solution (Control, Metadata,   Request Routing, and Logging).   [RFC7336] expands on the information provided in [RFC6707] and   describes each of the interfaces and the relationships between them   in more detail.   This document describes the "CI/T" interface -- "CDNI Control   interface / Triggers".  It does not consider those parts of the   Control interface that relate to configuration, bootstrapping, or   authentication of CDN Interconnect interfaces.Section 4 of   [RFC7337] identifies the requirements specific to the CI/T interface;   requirements applicable to the CI/T interface are CI-1 to CI-6.   oSection 2 outlines the model for the CI/T interface at a high      level.   oSection 3 describes collections of Trigger Status Resources.   oSection 4 defines the web service provided by the downstream CDN.   oSection 5 lists properties of CI/T Commands and Status Resources.   oSection 6 contains example messages.Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                    [Page 3]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 20161.1.  Terminology   This document reuses the terminology defined in [RFC6707] and uses   "uCDN" and "dCDN" as shorthand for "upstream CDN" and "downstream   CDN", respectively.   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this   document are to be interpreted as described inRFC 2119 [RFC2119].2.  Model for CDNI Triggers   A CI/T Command, sent from the uCDN to the dCDN, is a request for the   dCDN to do some work relating to data associated with content   requests originating from the uCDN.   There are two types of CI/T Commands: CI/T Trigger Commands and CI/T   Cancel Commands.  The CI/T Cancel Command can be used to request   cancellation of an earlier CI/T Trigger Command.  A CI/T Trigger   Command is of one of the following types:   o  preposition - used to instruct the dCDN to fetch metadata from the      uCDN, or content from any origin including the uCDN.   o  invalidate - used to instruct the dCDN to revalidate specific      metadata or content before reusing it.   o  purge - used to instruct the dCDN to delete specific metadata or      content.   The CI/T interface is a web service offered by the dCDN.  It allows   CI/T Commands to be issued and allows triggered activity to be   tracked.  The CI/T interface builds on top of HTTP/1.1 [RFC7230].   References to URL in this document relate to HTTP/HTTPS URIs, as   defined inSection 2.7 of [RFC7230].   When the dCDN accepts a CI/T Command, it creates a resource   describing the status of the triggered activity -- a Trigger Status   Resource.  The uCDN can poll Trigger Status Resources to monitor   progress.   The dCDN maintains at least one collection of Trigger Status   Resources for each uCDN.  Each uCDN only has access to its own   collections, the locations of which are shared when CDNI is   established.Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                    [Page 4]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 2016   To trigger activity in the dCDN, the uCDN POSTs a CI/T Command to the   collection of Trigger Status Resources.  If the dCDN accepts the CI/T   Command, it creates a new Trigger Status Resource and returns its   location to the uCDN.  To monitor progress, the uCDN can GET the   Trigger Status Resource.  To request cancellation of a CI/T Trigger   Command, the uCDN can POST to the collection of Trigger Status   Resources or simply delete the Trigger Status Resource.   In addition to the collection of all Trigger Status Resources for the   uCDN, the dCDN can maintain filtered views of that collection.  These   filtered views are defined inSection 3 and include collections of   Trigger Status Resources corresponding to active and completed CI/T   Trigger Commands.  These collections provide a mechanism for polling   the status of multiple jobs.   Figure 1 is an example showing the basic message flow used by the   uCDN to trigger activity in the dCDN and for the uCDN to discover the   status of that activity.  Only successful triggering is shown.   Examples of the messages are given inSection 6.      uCDN                                                   dCDN       |    (1) POST https://dcdn.example.com/triggers/uCDN    |      [ ] --------------------------------------------------> [ ]--+       |                                                      [ ]  | (2)       |    (3) HTTP 201 Response                             [ ]<-+      [ ] <-------------------------------------------------- [ ]       |     Loc: https://dcdn.example.com/triggers/uCDN/123   |       |                                                       |       .                           .                           .       .                           .                           .       .                           .                           .       |                                                       |       |   (4) GET https://dcdn.example.com/triggers/uCDN/123  |      [ ] --------------------------------------------------> [ ]       |                                                      [ ]       |   (5) HTTP 200 Trigger Status Resource               [ ]      [ ] <-------------------------------------------------- [ ]       |                                                       |       |                                                       |              Figure 1: Basic CDNI Message Flow for TriggersMurray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                    [Page 5]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 2016   The steps in Figure 1 are as follows:   1.  The uCDN triggers action in the dCDN by POSTing a CI/T Command to       a collection of Trigger Status Resources --       "https://dcdn.example.com/triggers/uCDN".  This URL was given to       the uCDN when the CI/T interface was established.   2.  The dCDN authenticates the request, validates the CI/T Command,       and, if it accepts the request, creates a new Trigger Status       Resource.   3.  The dCDN responds to the uCDN with an HTTP 201 response status       and the location of the Trigger Status Resource.   4.  The uCDN can poll, possibly repeatedly, the Trigger Status       Resource in the dCDN.   5.  The dCDN responds with the Trigger Status Resource, describing       the progress or results of the CI/T Trigger Command.   The remainder of this document describes the messages, Trigger Status   Resources, and collections of Trigger Status Resources in more   detail.2.1.  Timing of Triggered Activity   Timing of the execution of CI/T Commands is under the dCDN's control,   including its start time and pacing of the activity in the network.   CI/T "invalidate" and "purge" commands MUST be applied to all data   acquired before the command was accepted by the dCDN.  The dCDN   SHOULD NOT apply CI/T "invalidate" and "purge" commands to data   acquired after the CI/T Command was accepted, but this may not always   be achievable, so the uCDN cannot count on that.   If the uCDN wishes to invalidate or purge content and then   immediately pre-position replacement content at the same URLs, it   SHOULD ensure that the dCDN has completed the invalidate/purge before   initiating the pre-positioning.  Otherwise, there is a risk that the   dCDN pre-positions the new content, then immediately invalidates or   purges it (as a result of the two uCDN requests running in parallel).   Because the CI/T Command timing is under the dCDN's control, the dCDN   implementation can choose whether to apply CI/T "invalidate" and   "purge" commands to content acquisition that has already started when   the command is received.Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                    [Page 6]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 20162.2.  Scope of Triggered Activity   Each CI/T Command can operate on multiple metadata and content URLs.   Multiple representations of an HTTP resource may share the same URL.   CI/T Trigger Commands that invalidate or purge metadata or content   apply to all resource representations with matching URLs.2.2.1.  Multiple Interconnected CDNs   In a network of interconnected CDNs, a single uCDN will originate a   given item of metadata and associated content.  It may distribute   that metadata and content to more than one dCDN, which may in turn   distribute that metadata and content to CDNs located further   downstream.   An intermediate CDN is a dCDN that passes on CDNI Metadata and   content to dCDNs located further downstream.   A "diamond" configuration is one where a dCDN can acquire metadata   and content originated in one uCDN from that uCDN itself and an   intermediate CDN, or via more than one intermediate CDN.   CI/T Commands originating in the single source uCDN affect metadata   and content in all dCDNs; however, in a diamond configuration, it may   not be possible for the dCDN to determine which uCDN it acquired   content from.  In this case, a dCDN MUST allow each uCDN from which   it may have acquired the content to act upon that content using CI/T   Commands.   In all other cases, a dCDN MUST reject CI/T Commands from a uCDN that   attempts to act on another uCDN's content by using, for example,   HTTP 403 ("Forbidden").   Security considerations are discussed further inSection 8.   The diamond configuration may lead to inefficient interactions, but   the interactions are otherwise harmless.  For example:   o  When the uCDN issues an "invalidate" CI/T Command, a dCDN will      receive that command from multiple directly connected uCDNs.  The      dCDN may schedule multiple such commands separately, and the last      scheduled command may affect content already revalidated following      execution of the "invalidate" command that was scheduled first.Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                    [Page 7]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 2016   o  If one of a dCDN's directly connected uCDNs loses its rights to      distribute content, it may issue a CI/T "purge" command.  That      purge may affect content the dCDN could retain because it's      distributed by another directly connected uCDN.  But, that content      can be reacquired by the dCDN from the remaining uCDN.   o  When the uCDN originating an item of content issues a CI/T purge      followed by a pre-position, two directly connected uCDNs will pass      those commands to a dCDN.  That dCDN implementation need not merge      those operations or notice the repetition, in which case the purge      issued by one uCDN will complete before the other.  The first uCDN      to finish its purge may then forward the "preposition" trigger,      and content pre-positioned as a result might be affected by the      still-running purge issued by the other uCDN.  However, the dCDN      will reacquire that content as needed, or when it's asked to      pre-position the content by the second uCDN.  A dCDN      implementation could avoid this interaction by knowing which uCDN      it acquired the content from, or it could minimize the      consequences by recording the time at which the      "invalidate"/"purge" command was received and not applying it to      content acquired after that time.2.3.  Trigger Results   Possible states for a Trigger Status Resource are defined inSection 5.2.3.   The CI/T Trigger Command MUST NOT be reported as "complete" until all   actions have been completed successfully.  The reasons for failure,   and URLs or patterns affected, SHOULD be enumerated in the Trigger   Status Resource.  For more details, seeSection 4.7.   If a dCDN is also acting as a uCDN in a cascade, it MUST forward CI/T   Commands to any dCDNs that may be affected.  The CI/T Trigger Command   MUST NOT be reported as "complete" in a CDN until it is "complete" in   all of its dCDNs.  If a CI/T Trigger Command is reported as   "processed" in any dCDN, intermediate CDNs MUST NOT report   "complete"; instead, they MUST also report "processed".  A CI/T   Command MAY be reported as "failed" as soon as it fails in a CDN or   in any of its dCDNs.  A canceled CI/T Trigger Command MUST be   reported as "cancelling" until it has been reported as "cancelled",   "complete", or "failed" by all dCDNs in a cascade.Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                    [Page 8]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 20163.  Collections of Trigger Status Resources   As described inSection 2, Trigger Status Resources exist in the dCDN   to report the status of activity triggered by each uCDN.   A collection of Trigger Status Resources is a resource that contains   a reference to each Trigger Status Resource in that collection.   The dCDN MUST make a collection of a uCDN's Trigger Status Resources   available to that uCDN.  This collection includes all of the Trigger   Status Resources created for CI/T Commands from the uCDN that have   been accepted by the dCDN, and have not yet been deleted by the uCDN,   or expired and removed by the dCDN (as described inSection 4.4).   Trigger Status Resources belonging to a uCDN MUST NOT be visible to   any other CDN.  The dCDN could, for example, achieve this by offering   different collection URLs to each uCDN and by filtering the response   based on the uCDN with which the HTTP client is associated.   To trigger activity in a dCDN or to cancel triggered activity, the   uCDN POSTs a CI/T Command to the dCDN's collection of the uCDN's   Trigger Status Resources.   In order to allow the uCDN to check the status of multiple jobs in a   single request, the dCDN MAY also maintain collections representing   filtered views of the collection of all Trigger Status Resources.   These filtered collections are "optional-to-implement", but if they   are implemented, the dCDN MUST include links to them in the   collection of all Trigger Status Resources.  The filtered   collections are:   o  Pending - Trigger Status Resources for CI/T Trigger Commands that      have been accepted but not yet acted upon.   o  Active - Trigger Status Resources for CI/T Trigger Commands that      are currently being processed in the dCDN.   o  Complete - Trigger Status Resources representing activity that      completed successfully, and "processed" CI/T Trigger Commands for      which no further status updates will be made by the dCDN.   o  Failed - Trigger Status Resources representing CI/T Commands that      failed or were canceled by the uCDN.Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                    [Page 9]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 20164.  CDNI Trigger Interface   This section describes an interface to enable a uCDN to trigger   activity in a dCDN.   The CI/T interface builds on top of HTTP, so dCDNs may make use of   any HTTP feature when implementing the CI/T interface.  For example,   a dCDN SHOULD make use of HTTP's caching mechanisms to indicate that   a requested response/representation has not been modified, reducing   the uCDN's processing needed to determine whether the status of   triggered activity has changed.   All dCDNs implementing CI/T MUST support the HTTP GET, HEAD, POST,   and DELETE methods as defined in [RFC7231].   The only representation specified in this document is JSON [RFC7159].   It MUST be supported by the uCDN and by the dCDN.   The URL of the dCDN's collection of all Trigger Status Resources   needs to be either discovered by or configured in the uCDN.  The   mechanism for discovery of that URL is outside the scope of this   document.   CI/T Commands are POSTed to the dCDN's collection of all Trigger   Status Resources.  If a CI/T Trigger Command is accepted by the dCDN,   the dCDN creates a new Trigger Status Resource and returns its URI to   the uCDN in an HTTP 201 response.  The triggered activity can then be   monitored by the uCDN using that resource and the collections   described inSection 3.   The URI of each Trigger Status Resource is returned to the uCDN when   it is created, and URIs of all Trigger Status Resources are listed in   the dCDN's collection of all Trigger Status Resources.  This means   all Trigger Status Resources can be discovered by the uCDN, so dCDNs   are free to assign whatever structure they desire to the URIs for   CI/T resources.  Therefore, uCDNs MUST NOT make any assumptions   regarding the structure of CI/T URIs or the mapping between CI/T   objects and their associated URIs.  URIs present in the examples in   this document are purely illustrative and are not intended to impose   a definitive structure on CI/T interface implementations.Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                   [Page 10]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 20164.1.  Creating Triggers   To issue a CI/T Command, the uCDN makes an HTTP POST to the dCDN's   collection of all of the uCDN's Trigger Status Resources.  The   request body of that POST is a CI/T Command, as described inSection 5.1.1.   The dCDN validates the CI/T Command.  If the command is malformed or   the uCDN does not have sufficient access rights, the dCDN MUST either   respond with an appropriate 4xx HTTP error code and not create a   Trigger Status Resource or create a "failed" Trigger Status Resource   containing an appropriate Error Description.   When a CI/T Trigger Command is accepted, the uCDN MUST create a new   Trigger Status Resource that will convey a specification of the CI/T   Command and its current status.  The HTTP response to the dCDN MUST   have status code 201 and MUST convey the URI of the Trigger Status   Resource in the Location header field [RFC7231].  The HTTP response   SHOULD include the content of the newly created Trigger Status   Resource.  This is particularly important in cases where the CI/T   Trigger Command has completed immediately.   Once a Trigger Status Resource has been created, the dCDN MUST NOT   reuse its URI, even after that Trigger Status Resource has been   removed.   The dCDN SHOULD track and report on the progress of CI/T Trigger   Commands using a Trigger Status Resource (Section 5.1.2).  If the   dCDN is not able to do that, it MUST indicate that it has accepted   the request but will not be providing further status updates.  To do   this, it sets the status of the Trigger Status Resource to   "processed".  In this case, CI/T processing should continue as for a   "complete" request, so the Trigger Status Resource MUST be added to   the dCDN's collection of complete Trigger Status Resources.  The dCDN   SHOULD also provide an estimated completion time for the request by   using the "etime" property of the Trigger Status Resource.  This will   allow the uCDN to schedule pre-positioning after an earlier delete of   the same URLs is expected to have finished.   If the dCDN is able to track the execution of CI/T Commands and a   CI/T Command is queued by the dCDN for later action, the "status"   property of the Trigger Status Resource MUST be "pending".  Once   processing has started, the status MUST be "active".  Finally, once   the CI/T Command is complete, the status MUST be set to "complete" or   "failed".Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                   [Page 11]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 2016   A CI/T Trigger Command may result in no activity in the dCDN if, for   example, it is an "invalidate" or "purge" request for data the dCDN   has not yet acquired, or a "preposition" request for data that it has   already acquired and that is still valid.  In this case, the status   of the Trigger Status Resource MUST be "processed" or "complete", and   the Trigger Status Resource MUST be added to the dCDN's collection of   complete Trigger Status Resources.   Once created, Trigger Status Resources can be canceled or deleted by   the uCDN, but not modified.  The dCDN MUST reject PUT and POST   requests from the uCDN to Trigger Status Resources by responding with   an appropriate HTTP status code -- for example, 405 ("Method Not   Allowed").4.2.  Checking Status   The uCDN has two ways to check the progress of CI/T Commands it has   issued to the dCDN, as described in Sections4.2.1 and4.2.2.   To allow the uCDN to check for changes in the status of a Trigger   Status Resource or collection of Trigger Status Resources without   refetching the whole resource or collection, the dCDN SHOULD include   entity-tags (ETags) for the uCDN to use as cache validators, as   defined in [RFC7232].   The dCDN SHOULD use the cache control headers for responses to GETs   for Trigger Status Resources and Collections to indicate the   frequency at which it recommends that the uCDN should poll for   change.4.2.1.  Polling Trigger Status Resource Collections   The uCDN can fetch the collection of its Trigger Status Resources or   filtered views of that collection.   This makes it possible to poll the status of all CI/T Trigger   Commands in a single request.  If the dCDN moves a Trigger Status   Resource from the active to the completed collection, the uCDN can   fetch the result of that activity.   When polling in this way, the uCDN SHOULD use HTTP ETags to monitor   for change, rather than repeatedly fetching the whole collection.  An   example of this is given inSection 6.2.4.Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                   [Page 12]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 20164.2.2.  Polling Trigger Status Resources   The uCDN has a URI provided by the dCDN for each Trigger Status   Resource it has created.  It may fetch that Trigger Status Resource   at any time.   This can be used to retrieve progress information and to fetch the   result of the CI/T Command.   When polling in this way, the uCDN SHOULD use HTTP ETags to monitor   for change, rather than repeatedly fetching the Trigger Status   Resource.4.3.  Canceling Triggers   The uCDN can request cancellation of a CI/T Trigger Command by   POSTing a CI/T Cancel Command to the collection of all Trigger Status   Resources.   The dCDN is required to accept and respond to the CI/T Cancel   Command, but the actual cancellation of a CI/T Trigger Command is   optional-to-implement.   The dCDN MUST respond to the CI/T Cancel Command appropriately -- for   example, with HTTP status code 200 ("OK") if the cancellation has   been processed and the CI/T Command is inactive, 202 ("Accepted") if   the command has been accepted but the CI/T Command remains active, or   501 ("Not Implemented") if cancellation is not supported by the dCDN.   If cancellation of a "pending" Trigger Status Resource is accepted by   the dCDN, the dCDN SHOULD NOT start the processing of that activity.   Issuing a CI/T Cancel Command for a "pending" Trigger Status Resource   does not, however, guarantee that the corresponding activity will not   be started, because the uCDN cannot control the timing of that   activity.  Processing could, for example, start after the POST is   sent by the uCDN but before that request is processed by the dCDN.   If cancellation of an "active" or "processed" Trigger Status Resource   is accepted by the dCDN, the dCDN SHOULD stop processing the CI/T   Command.  However, as with cancellation of a "pending" CI/T Command,   the dCDN does not guarantee this.   If the CI/T Command cannot be stopped immediately, the status in the   corresponding Trigger Status Resource MUST be set to "cancelling",   and the Trigger Status Resource MUST remain in the collection of   Trigger Status Resources for active CI/T Commands.  If processing is   stopped before normal completion, the status value in the TriggerMurray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                   [Page 13]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 2016   Status Resource MUST be set to "cancelled", and the Trigger Status   Resource MUST be included in the collection of failed CI/T Trigger   Commands.   Cancellation of a "complete" or "failed" Trigger Status Resource   requires no processing in the dCDN.  Its status MUST NOT be changed   to "cancelled".4.4.  Deleting Triggers   The uCDN can delete Trigger Status Resources at any time, using the   HTTP DELETE method.  The effect is similar to cancellation, but no   Trigger Status Resource remains afterwards.   Once deleted, the references to a Trigger Status Resource MUST be   removed from all Trigger Status Resource collections.  Subsequent   requests to GET the deleted Trigger Status Resource SHOULD be   rejected by the dCDN with an HTTP error.   If a "pending" Trigger Status Resource is deleted, the dCDN   SHOULD NOT start the processing of that activity.  Deleting a   "pending" Trigger Status Resource does not, however, guarantee that   it has not started, because the uCDN cannot control the timing of   that activity.  Processing may, for example, start after the DELETE   is sent by the uCDN but before that request is processed by the dCDN.   If an "active" or "processed" Trigger Status Resource is deleted, the   dCDN SHOULD stop processing the CI/T Command.  However, as with   deletion of a "pending" Trigger Status Resource, the dCDN does not   guarantee this.   Deletion of a "complete" or "failed" Trigger Status Resource requires   no processing in the dCDN other than deletion of the Trigger Status   Resource.4.5.  Expiry of Trigger Status Resources   The dCDN can choose to automatically delete Trigger Status Resources   some time after they become "complete", "processed", "failed", or   "cancelled".  In this case, the dCDN will remove the Trigger Status   Resource and respond to subsequent requests for it with an HTTP   error.   If the dCDN does remove Trigger Status Resources automatically, it   MUST report the length of time after which it will do so, using a   property of the collection of all Trigger Status Resources.  It isMurray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                   [Page 14]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 2016   RECOMMENDED that Trigger Status Resources are not automatically   deleted by the dCDN for at least 24 hours after they become   "complete", "processed", "failed", or "cancelled".   To ensure that it is able to get the status of its Trigger Status   Resources for completed and failed CI/T Commands, it is RECOMMENDED   that the uCDN polling interval is less than the time after which   records for completed activity will be deleted.4.6.  Loop Detection and Prevention   Given three CDNs, A, B, and C, if CDNs B and C delegate delivery of   CDN A's content to each other, CDN A's CI/T Commands could be passed   between CDNs B and C in a loop.  More complex networks of CDNs could   contain similar loops involving more hops.   In order to prevent and detect such CI/T loops, each CDN uses a CDN   Provider ID (PID) to uniquely identify itself.  In every CI/T Command   it originates or cascades, each CDN MUST append an array element   containing its CDN PID to a JSON array under an entry named   "cdn-path".  When receiving CI/T Commands, a dCDN MUST check the   cdn-path and reject any CI/T Command that already contains its own   CDN PID in the cdn-path.  Transit CDNs MUST check the cdn-path and   not cascade the CI/T Command to dCDNs that are already listed in the   cdn-path.   The CDN PID consists of the two characters "AS" followed by the CDN   provider's Autonomous System number [RFC1930], then a colon (":") and   an additional qualifier that is used to guarantee uniqueness in case   a particular AS has multiple independent CDNs deployed -- for   example, "AS64496:0".   If the CDN provider has multiple ASes, the same AS number SHOULD be   used in all messages from that CDN provider, unless there are   multiple distinct CDNs.   If the CDNI Request Routing Redirection interface (RI) described in   [RFC7975] is implemented by the dCDN, the CI/T interface and the RI   SHOULD use the same CDN PID.4.7.  Error Handling   A dCDN can signal rejection of a CI/T Command using HTTP status codes   -- for example, 400 ("Bad Request") if the request is malformed, or   403 ("Forbidden") or 404 ("Not Found") if the uCDN does not have   permission to issue CI/T Commands or it is trying to act on another   CDN's data.Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                   [Page 15]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 2016   If any part of the CI/T Trigger Command fails, the trigger SHOULD be   reported as "failed" once its activity is complete or if no further   errors will be reported.  The "errors" property in the Trigger Status   Resource will be used to enumerate which actions failed and the   reasons for failure, and can be present while the Trigger Status   Resource is still "pending" or "active", if the CI/T Trigger Command   is still running for some URLs or patterns in the Trigger   Specification.   Once a request has been accepted, processing errors are reported in   the Trigger Status Resource using a list of Error Descriptions.  Each   Error Description is used to report errors against one or more of the   URLs or patterns in the Trigger Specification.   If a Surrogate affected by a CI/T Trigger Command is offline in the   dCDN or the dCDN is unable to pass a CI/T Command on to any of its   cascaded dCDNs:   o  If the CI/T Command is abandoned by the dCDN, the dCDN SHOULD      report an error.   o  A CI/T "invalidate" command may be reported as "complete" when      Surrogates that may have the data are offline.  In this case,      Surrogates MUST NOT use the affected data without first      revalidating it when they are back online.   o  CI/T "preposition" and "purge" commands can be reported as      "processed" if affected caches are offline and the activity will      complete when they return to service.   o  Otherwise, the dCDN SHOULD keep the Trigger Status Resource in      state "pending" or "active" until either the CI/T Command is acted      upon or the uCDN chooses to cancel it.4.8.  Content URLs   If content URLs are transformed by an intermediate CDN in a cascade,   that intermediate CDN MUST similarly transform URLs in CI/T Commands   it passes to its dCDN.   When processing Trigger Specifications, CDNs MUST ignore the URL   scheme (HTTP or HTTPS) in comparing URLs.  For example, for a CI/T   "invalidate" or "purge" command, content MUST be invalidated or   purged regardless of the protocol clients used to request it.Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                   [Page 16]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 20165.  CI/T Object Properties and Encoding   The CI/T Commands, Trigger Status Resources, and Trigger Collections,   as well as their properties, are encoded using JSON, as defined in   Sections5.1.1,5.1.2, and5.1.3.  They MUST use the MIME media type   "application/cdni", with parameter "ptype" values as defined below   and inSection 7.1.   Names in JSON are case sensitive.  The names and literal values   specified in the present document MUST always use lowercase.   JSON types, including "object", "array", "number", and "string", are   defined in [RFC7159].   Unrecognized name/value pairs in JSON objects SHOULD NOT be treated   as an error by either the uCDN or dCDN.  They SHOULD be ignored   during processing and passed on by the dCDN to any further dCDNs in a   cascade.5.1.  CI/T Objects   The top-level objects defined by the CI/T interface are described in   this section.   The encoding of values used by these objects is described inSection 5.2.5.1.1.  CI/T Commands   CI/T Commands MUST use a MIME media type of "application/cdni;   ptype=ci-trigger-command".   A CI/T Command is encoded as a JSON object containing the following   name/value pairs.      Name: trigger         Description: A specification of the trigger type and a set of         data to act upon.         Value: A Trigger Specification, as defined inSection 5.2.1.         Mandatory: No, but exactly one of "trigger" or "cancel" MUST be         present in a CI/T Command.Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                   [Page 17]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 2016      Name: cancel         Description: The URLs of Trigger Status Resources for CI/T         Trigger Commands that the uCDN wants to cancel.         Value: A non-empty JSON array of URLs represented as JSON         strings.         Mandatory: No, but exactly one of "trigger" or "cancel" MUST be         present in a CI/T Command.      Name: cdn-path         Description: The CDN PIDs of CDNs that have already issued the         CI/T Command to their dCDNs.         Value: A non-empty JSON array of JSON strings, where each         string is a CDN PID as defined inSection 4.6.         Mandatory: Yes.5.1.2.  Trigger Status Resources   Trigger Status Resources MUST use a MIME media type of   "application/cdni; ptype=ci-trigger-status".   A Trigger Status Resource is encoded as a JSON object containing the   following name/value pairs.      Name: trigger         Description: The Trigger Specification POSTed in the body of         the CI/T Command.  Note that this need not be a byte-for-byte         copy.  For example, in the JSON representation the dCDN may         re-serialize the information differently.         Value: A Trigger Specification, as defined inSection 5.2.1.         Mandatory: Yes.Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                   [Page 18]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 2016      Name: ctime         Description: Time at which the CI/T Command was received by the         dCDN.  Time is determined by the dCDN; there is no requirement         to synchronize clocks between interconnected CDNs.         Value: Absolute Time, as defined inSection 5.2.5.         Mandatory: Yes.      Name: mtime         Description: Time at which the Trigger Status Resource was last         modified.  Time is determined by the dCDN; there is no         requirement to synchronize clocks between interconnected CDNs.         Value: Absolute Time, as defined inSection 5.2.5.         Mandatory: Yes.      Name: etime         Description: Estimate of the time at which the dCDN expects to         complete the activity.  Time is determined by the dCDN; there         is no requirement to synchronize clocks between interconnected         CDNs.         Value: Absolute Time, as defined inSection 5.2.5.         Mandatory: No.      Name: status         Description: Current status of the triggered activity.         Value: Trigger Status, as defined inSection 5.2.3.         Mandatory: Yes.Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                   [Page 19]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 2016      Name: errors         Description: Descriptions of errors that have occurred while         processing a Trigger Command.         Value: An array of Error Descriptions, as defined inSection 5.2.6.  An empty array is allowed and is equivalent to         omitting "errors" from the object.         Mandatory: No.5.1.3.  Trigger Collections   Trigger Collections MUST use a MIME media type of "application/cdni;   ptype=ci-trigger-collection".   A Trigger Collection is encoded as a JSON object containing the   following name/value pairs.      Name: triggers         Description: Links to Trigger Status Resources in the         collection.         Value: A JSON array of zero or more URLs, represented as JSON         strings.         Mandatory: Yes.      Name: staleresourcetime         Description: The length of time for which the dCDN guarantees         to keep a completed Trigger Status Resource.  After this time,         the dCDN SHOULD delete the Trigger Status Resource and all         references to it from collections.         Value: A JSON number, which must be a positive integer,         representing time in seconds.         Mandatory: Yes, in the collection of all Trigger Status         Resources if the dCDN deletes stale entries.  If the property         is present in the filtered collections, it MUST have the same         value as in the collection of all Trigger Status Resources.Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                   [Page 20]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 2016      Names: coll-all, coll-pending, coll-active, coll-complete,      coll-failed         Description: Link to a Trigger Collection.         Value: A URL represented as a JSON string.         Mandatory: Links to all of the filtered collections are         mandatory in the collection of all Trigger Status Resources, if         the dCDN implements the filtered collections.  Otherwise,         optional.      Name: cdn-id         Description: The CDN PID of the dCDN.         Value: A JSON string, the dCDN's CDN PID, as defined inSection 4.6.         Mandatory: Only in the collection of all Trigger Status         Resources, if the dCDN implements the filtered collections.         Optional in the filtered collections (the uCDN can always find         the dCDN's cdn-id in the collection of all Trigger Status         Resources, but the dCDN can choose to repeat that information         in its implementation of filtered collections).5.2.  Properties of CI/T Objects   This section defines the values that can appear in the top-level   objects described inSection 5.1, and their encodings.5.2.1.  Trigger Specification   A Trigger Collection is encoded as a JSON object containing the   following name/value pairs.   An unrecognized name/value pair in the Trigger Specification object   contained in a CI/T Command SHOULD be preserved in the Trigger   Specification of any Trigger Status Resource it creates.      Name: type         Description: Defines the type of the CI/T Trigger Command.         Value: Trigger Type, as defined inSection 5.2.2.         Mandatory: Yes.Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                   [Page 21]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 2016      Name: metadata.urls         Description: The uCDN URLs of the metadata the CI/T Trigger         Command applies to.         Value: A JSON array of URLs represented as JSON strings.         Mandatory: No, but at least one of "metadata.*" or "content.*"         MUST be present and non-empty.      Name: content.urls         Description: URLs of content the CI/T Trigger Command applies         to.  SeeSection 4.8.         Value: A JSON array of URLs represented as JSON strings.         Mandatory: No, but at least one of "metadata.*" or "content.*"         MUST be present and non-empty.      Name: content.ccid         Description: The Content Collection IDentifier of content the         trigger applies to.  The "ccid" is a grouping of content, as         defined by [RFC8006].         Value: A JSON array of strings, where each string is a Content         Collection IDentifier.         Mandatory: No, but at least one of "metadata.*" or "content.*"         MUST be present and non-empty.      Name: metadata.patterns         Description: The metadata the trigger applies to.         Value: A JSON array of PatternMatch objects, as defined inSection 5.2.4.         Mandatory: No, but at least one of "metadata.*" or "content.*"         MUST be present and non-empty, and metadata.patterns MUST NOT         be present if the Trigger Type is "preposition".Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                   [Page 22]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 2016      Name: content.patterns         Description: The content data the trigger applies to.         Value: A JSON array of PatternMatch objects, as defined inSection 5.2.4.         Mandatory: No, but at least one of "metadata.*" or "content.*"         MUST be present and non-empty, and content.patterns MUST NOT be         present if the Trigger Type is "preposition".5.2.2.  Trigger Type   Trigger Type is used in a Trigger Specification to describe trigger   action.   All trigger types MUST be registered in the IANA "CDNI CI/T Trigger   Types" registry (seeSection 7.2).   A dCDN receiving a request containing a trigger type it does not   recognize or does not support MUST reject the request by creating a   Trigger Status Resource with a status of "failed" and the "errors"   array containing an Error Description with error "eunsupported".   The following trigger types are defined by this document:   +-------------+-----------------------------------------------------+   | JSON String | Description                                         |   +-------------+-----------------------------------------------------+   | preposition | A request for the dCDN to acquire metadata or       |   |             | content.                                            |   | invalidate  | A request for the dCDN to invalidate metadata or    |   |             | content.  After servicing this request, the dCDN    |   |             | will not use the specified data without first       |   |             | revalidating it using, for example, an              |   |             | "If-None-Match" HTTP request.  The dCDN need not    |   |             | erase the associated data.                          |   | purge       | A request for the dCDN to erase metadata or         |   |             | content.  After servicing the request, the          |   |             | specified data MUST NOT be held on the dCDN (the    |   |             | dCDN should reacquire the metadata or content from  |   |             | the uCDN if it needs it).                           |   +-------------+-----------------------------------------------------+Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                   [Page 23]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 20165.2.3.  Trigger Status   Trigger Status describes the current status of the triggered   activity.  It MUST be one of the JSON strings in the following table:   +-----------+-------------------------------------------------------+   | JSON      | Description                                           |   | String    |                                                       |   +-----------+-------------------------------------------------------+   | pending   | The CI/T Trigger Command has not yet been acted upon. |   | active    | The CI/T Trigger Command is currently being acted     |   |           | upon.                                                 |   | complete  | The CI/T Trigger Command completed successfully.      |   | processed | The CI/T Trigger Command has been accepted, and no    |   |           | further status update will be made (can be used in    |   |           | cases where completion cannot be confirmed).          |   | failed    | The CI/T Trigger Command could not be completed.      |   | canceling | Processing of the CI/T Trigger Command is still in    |   |           | progress, but the CI/T Trigger Command has been       |   |           | canceled by the uCDN.                                 |   | canceled  | The CI/T Trigger Command was canceled by the uCDN.    |   +-----------+-------------------------------------------------------+5.2.4.  PatternMatch   A PatternMatch consists of a string pattern to match against a URI,   and flags describing the type of match.   It is encoded as a JSON object with the following name/value pairs:      Name: pattern         Description: A pattern for URI matching.         Value: A JSON string representing the pattern.  The pattern can         contain the wildcards * and ?, where * matches any sequence of         [RFC3986] pchar or "/" characters (including the empty string)         and ? matches exactly one [RFC3986] pchar character.  The three         literals $, * and ? MUST be escaped as $$, $* and $? (where $         is the designated escape character).  All other characters are         treated as literals.         Mandatory: Yes.Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                   [Page 24]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 2016      Name: case-sensitive         Description: Flag indicating whether or not case-sensitive         matching should be used.         Value: One of the JSON values "true" (the matching is case         sensitive) or "false" (the matching is case insensitive).         Mandatory: No; default is case-insensitive match.      Name: match-query-string         Description: Flag indicating whether to include the query part         of the URI when comparing against the pattern.         Value: One of the JSON values "true" (the full URI, including         the query part, should be compared against the given pattern)         or "false" (the query part of the URI should be dropped before         comparison with the given pattern).         Mandatory: No; default is "false".  The query part of the URI         should be dropped before comparison with the given pattern.   Example of case-sensitive prefix match against   "https://www.example.com/trailers/":   {       "pattern": "https://www.example.com/trailers/*",       "case-sensitive": true   }5.2.5.  Absolute Time   A JSON number, seconds since the UNIX epoch (00:00:00 UTC on   1 January 1970).Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                   [Page 25]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 20165.2.6.  Error Description   An Error Description is used to report the failure of a CI/T Command   or failure in the activity it triggered.  It is encoded as a JSON   object with the following name/value pairs:      Name: error         Value: Error Code, as defined inSection 5.2.7.         Mandatory: Yes.      Names: metadata.urls, content.urls, metadata.patterns,      content.patterns         Description: Metadata and content references copied from the         Trigger Specification.  Only those URLs and patterns to which         the error applies are included in each property, but those URLs         and patterns MUST be exactly as they appear in the request; the         dCDN MUST NOT generalize the URLs.  (For example, if the uCDN         requests pre-positioning of URLs         "https://content.example.com/a" and         "https://content.example.com/b", the dCDN must not generalize         its error report to the pattern         "https://content.example.com/*".)         Value: A JSON array of JSON strings, where each string is         copied from a "content.*" or "metadata.*" value in the         corresponding Trigger Specification.         Mandatory: At least one of these name/value pairs is mandatory         in each Error Description object.      Name: description         Description: A human-readable description of the error.         Value: A JSON string, the human-readable description.         Mandatory: No.5.2.7.  Error Code   This type is used by the dCDN to report failures in trigger   processing.  All Error Codes MUST be registered in the IANA "CDNI   CI/T Error Codes" registry (seeSection 7.3).  Unknown Error Codes   MUST be treated as fatal errors, and the request MUST NOT be   automatically retried without modification.Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                   [Page 26]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 2016   The following Error Codes are defined by this document and MUST be   supported by an implementation of the CI/T interface.   +--------------+----------------------------------------------------+   | Error Code   | Description                                        |   +--------------+----------------------------------------------------+   | emeta        | The dCDN was unable to acquire metadata required   |   |              | to fulfill the request.                            |   | econtent     | The dCDN was unable to acquire content (CI/T       |   |              | "preposition" commands only).                      |   | eperm        | The uCDN does not have permission to issue the     |   |              | CI/T Command (for example, the data is owned by    |   |              | another CDN).                                      |   | ereject      | The dCDN is not willing to fulfill the CI/T        |   |              | Command (for example, a "preposition" request for  |   |              | content at a time when the dCDN would not accept   |   |              | Request Routing requests from the uCDN).           |   | ecdn         | An internal error in the dCDN or one of its dCDNs. |   | ecanceled    | The uCDN canceled the request.                     |   | eunsupported | The Trigger Specification contained a "type" that  |   |              | is not supported by the dCDN.  No action was taken |   |              | by the dCDN other than to create a Trigger Status  |   |              | Resource in state "failed".                        |   +--------------+----------------------------------------------------+6.  Examples   The following subsections provide examples of different CI/T objects   encoded as JSON.   Discovery of the CI/T interface is out of scope for this document.   In an implementation, all CI/T URLs are under the control of the   dCDN.  The uCDN MUST NOT attempt to ascribe any meaning to individual   elements of the path.   In examples in this section, the URL "https://dcdn.example.com/   triggers" is used as the location of the collection of all Trigger   Status Resources, and the CDN PID of the uCDN is "AS64496:1".Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                   [Page 27]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 20166.1.  Creating Triggers   Examples of the uCDN triggering activity in the dCDN:6.1.1.  Preposition   Below is an example of a CI/T "preposition" command -- a POST to the   collection of all Trigger Status Resources.   Note that "metadata.patterns" and "content.patterns" are not allowed   in a pre-position Trigger Specification.   REQUEST:     POST /triggers HTTP/1.1     User-Agent: example-user-agent/0.1     Host: dcdn.example.com     Accept: */*     Content-Type: application/cdni; ptype=ci-trigger-command     Content-Length: 352     {       "trigger": {         "type": "preposition",         "metadata.urls": [ "https://metadata.example.com/a/b/c" ],         "content.urls": [             "https://www.example.com/a/b/c/1",             "https://www.example.com/a/b/c/2",             "https://www.example.com/a/b/c/3",             "https://www.example.com/a/b/c/4"           ]       },       "cdn-path": [ "AS64496:1" ]     }Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                   [Page 28]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 2016   RESPONSE:     HTTP/1.1 201 Created     Date: Wed, 04 May 2016 08:48:10 GMT     Content-Length: 467     Content-Type: application/cdni; ptype=ci-trigger-status     Location: https://dcdn.example.com/triggers/0     Server: example-server/0.1     {         "ctime": 1462351690,         "etime": 1462351698,         "mtime": 1462351690,         "status": "pending",         "trigger": {             "content.urls": [                 "https://www.example.com/a/b/c/1",                 "https://www.example.com/a/b/c/2",                 "https://www.example.com/a/b/c/3",                 "https://www.example.com/a/b/c/4"             ],             "metadata.urls": [                 "https://metadata.example.com/a/b/c"             ],             "type": "preposition"         }     }Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                   [Page 29]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 20166.1.2.  Invalidate   Below is an example of a CI/T "invalidate" command -- another POST to   the collection of all Trigger Status Resources.  This instructs the   dCDN to revalidate the content at "https://www.example.com/a/   index.html", as well as any metadata and content whose URLs are   prefixed by "https://metadata.example.com/a/b/" using   case-insensitive matching, and "https://www.example.com/a/b/" using   case-sensitive matching, respectively.   REQUEST:     POST /triggers HTTP/1.1     User-Agent: example-user-agent/0.1     Host: dcdn.example.com     Accept: */*     Content-Type: application/cdni; ptype=ci-trigger-command     Content-Length: 387     {       "trigger": {         "type": "invalidate",         "metadata.patterns": [             { "pattern": "https://metadata.example.com/a/b/*" }           ],         "content.urls": [ "https://www.example.com/a/index.html" ],         "content.patterns": [             { "pattern": "https://www.example.com/a/b/*",               "case-sensitive": true             }           ]       },       "cdn-path": [ "AS64496:1" ]     }Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                   [Page 30]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 2016   RESPONSE:     HTTP/1.1 201 Created     Date: Wed, 04 May 2016 08:48:11 GMT     Content-Length: 545     Content-Type: application/cdni; ptype=ci-trigger-status     Location: https://dcdn.example.com/triggers/1     Server: example-server/0.1     {         "ctime": 1462351691,         "etime": 1462351699,         "mtime": 1462351691,         "status": "pending",         "trigger": {             "content.patterns": [                 {                     "case-sensitive": true,                     "pattern": "https://www.example.com/a/b/*"                 }             ],             "content.urls": [                 "https://www.example.com/a/index.html"             ],             "metadata.patterns": [                 {                     "pattern": "https://metadata.example.com/a/b/*"                 }             ],             "type": "invalidate"         }     }Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                   [Page 31]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 20166.2.  Examining Trigger Status   Once Trigger Status Resources have been created, the uCDN can check   their status as shown in the following examples.6.2.1.  Collection of All Triggers   The uCDN can fetch the collection of all Trigger Status Resources it   has created that have not yet been deleted or removed as expired.   After creation of the "preposition" and "invalidate" triggers shown   above, this collection might look as follows:   REQUEST:     GET /triggers HTTP/1.1     User-Agent: example-user-agent/0.1     Host: dcdn.example.com     Accept: */*   RESPONSE:     HTTP/1.1 200 OK     Content-Length: 341     Expires: Wed, 04 May 2016 08:49:11 GMT     Server: example-server/0.1     ETag: "-936094426920308378"     Cache-Control: max-age=60     Date: Wed, 04 May 2016 08:48:11 GMT     Content-Type: application/cdni; ptype=ci-trigger-collection     {         "cdn-id": "AS64496:0",         "coll-active": "/triggers/active",         "coll-complete": "/triggers/complete",         "coll-failed": "/triggers/failed",         "coll-pending": "/triggers/pending",         "staleresourcetime": 86400,         "triggers": [             "https://dcdn.example.com/triggers/0",             "https://dcdn.example.com/triggers/1"         ]     }Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                   [Page 32]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 20166.2.2.  Filtered Collections of Trigger Status Resources   The filtered collections are also available to the uCDN.  Before the   dCDN starts processing the two CI/T Trigger Commands shown above,   both will appear in the collection of pending triggers.  For example:   REQUEST:     GET /triggers/pending HTTP/1.1     User-Agent: example-user-agent/0.1     Host: dcdn.example.com     Accept: */*   RESPONSE:     HTTP/1.1 200 OK     Content-Length: 152     Expires: Wed, 04 May 2016 08:49:11 GMT     Server: example-server/0.1     ETag: "4331492443626270781"     Cache-Control: max-age=60     Date: Wed, 04 May 2016 08:48:11 GMT     Content-Type: application/cdni; ptype=ci-trigger-collection     {         "staleresourcetime": 86400,         "triggers": [             "https://dcdn.example.com/triggers/0",             "https://dcdn.example.com/triggers/1"         ]     }   At this point, if no other Trigger Status Resources had been created,   the other filtered views would be empty.  For example:   REQUEST:     GET /triggers/complete HTTP/1.1     User-Agent: example-user-agent/0.1     Host: dcdn.example.com     Accept: */*Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                   [Page 33]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 2016   RESPONSE:     HTTP/1.1 200 OK     Content-Length: 54     Expires: Wed, 04 May 2016 08:49:11 GMT     Server: example-server/0.1     ETag: "7958041393922269003"     Cache-Control: max-age=60     Date: Wed, 04 May 2016 08:48:11 GMT     Content-Type: application/cdni; ptype=ci-trigger-collection     {         "staleresourcetime": 86400,         "triggers": []     }6.2.3.  Individual Trigger Status Resources   The Trigger Status Resources can also be examined for details about   individual CI/T Trigger Commands.  For example, for the CI/T   "preposition" and "invalidate" commands from previous examples:   REQUEST:     GET /triggers/0 HTTP/1.1     User-Agent: example-user-agent/0.1     Host: dcdn.example.com     Accept: */*Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                   [Page 34]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 2016   RESPONSE:     HTTP/1.1 200 OK     Content-Length: 467     Expires: Wed, 04 May 2016 08:49:10 GMT     Server: example-server/0.1     ETag: "6990548174277557683"     Cache-Control: max-age=60     Date: Wed, 04 May 2016 08:48:10 GMT     Content-Type: application/cdni; ptype=ci-trigger-status     {         "ctime": 1462351690,         "etime": 1462351698,         "mtime": 1462351690,         "status": "pending",         "trigger": {             "content.urls": [                 "https://www.example.com/a/b/c/1",                 "https://www.example.com/a/b/c/2",                 "https://www.example.com/a/b/c/3",                 "https://www.example.com/a/b/c/4"             ],             "metadata.urls": [                 "https://metadata.example.com/a/b/c"             ],             "type": "preposition"         }     }   REQUEST:     GET /triggers/1 HTTP/1.1     User-Agent: example-user-agent/0.1     Host: dcdn.example.com     Accept: */*   RESPONSE:     HTTP/1.1 200 OK     Content-Length: 545     Expires: Wed, 04 May 2016 08:49:11 GMT     Server: example-server/0.1     ETag: "-554385204989405469"     Cache-Control: max-age=60     Date: Wed, 04 May 2016 08:48:11 GMT     Content-Type: application/cdni; ptype=ci-trigger-statusMurray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                   [Page 35]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 2016     {         "ctime": 1462351691,         "etime": 1462351699,         "mtime": 1462351691,         "status": "pending",         "trigger": {             "content.patterns": [                 {                     "case-sensitive": true,                     "pattern": "https://www.example.com/a/b/*"                 }             ],             "content.urls": [                 "https://www.example.com/a/index.html"             ],             "metadata.patterns": [                 {                     "pattern": "https://metadata.example.com/a/b/*"                 }             ],             "type": "invalidate"         }     }6.2.4.  Polling for Changes in Status   The uCDN SHOULD use the ETags of collections or Trigger Status   Resources when polling for changes in status, as shown in the   following examples:   REQUEST:     GET /triggers/pending HTTP/1.1     User-Agent: example-user-agent/0.1     Host: dcdn.example.com     Accept: */*     If-None-Match: "4331492443626270781"   RESPONSE:     HTTP/1.1 304 Not Modified     Content-Length: 0     Expires: Wed, 04 May 2016 08:49:11 GMT     Server: example-server/0.1     ETag: "4331492443626270781"     Cache-Control: max-age=60     Date: Wed, 04 May 2016 08:48:11 GMT     Content-Type: application/cdni; ptype=ci-trigger-collectionMurray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                   [Page 36]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 2016   REQUEST:     GET /triggers/0 HTTP/1.1     User-Agent: example-user-agent/0.1     Host: dcdn.example.com     Accept: */*     If-None-Match: "6990548174277557683"   RESPONSE:     HTTP/1.1 304 Not Modified     Content-Length: 0     Expires: Wed, 04 May 2016 08:49:10 GMT     Server: example-server/0.1     ETag: "6990548174277557683"     Cache-Control: max-age=60     Date: Wed, 04 May 2016 08:48:10 GMT     Content-Type: application/cdni; ptype=ci-trigger-status   When the CI/T Trigger Command is complete, the contents of the   filtered collections will be updated along with their ETags.  For   example, when the two example CI/T Trigger Commands are complete, the   collections of pending and complete Trigger Status Resources might   look like:   REQUEST:     GET /triggers/pending HTTP/1.1     User-Agent: example-user-agent/0.1     Host: dcdn.example.com     Accept: */*   RESPONSE:     HTTP/1.1 200 OK     Content-Length: 54     Expires: Wed, 04 May 2016 08:49:15 GMT     Server: example-server/0.1     ETag: "1337503181677633762"     Cache-Control: max-age=60     Date: Wed, 04 May 2016 08:48:15 GMT     Content-Type: application/cdni; ptype=ci-trigger-collection     {         "staleresourcetime": 86400,         "triggers": []     }Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                   [Page 37]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 2016   REQUEST:     GET /triggers/complete HTTP/1.1     User-Agent: example-user-agent/0.1     Host: dcdn.example.com     Accept: */*   RESPONSE:     HTTP/1.1 200 OK     Content-Length: 152     Expires: Wed, 04 May 2016 08:49:22 GMT     Server: example-server/0.1     ETag: "4481489539378529796"     Cache-Control: max-age=60     Date: Wed, 04 May 2016 08:48:22 GMT     Content-Type: application/cdni; ptype=ci-trigger-collection     {         "staleresourcetime": 86400,         "triggers": [             "https://dcdn.example.com/triggers/0",             "https://dcdn.example.com/triggers/1"         ]     }6.2.5.  Deleting Trigger Status Resources   The uCDN can delete completed and failed Trigger Status Resources to   reduce the size of the collections, as described inSection 4.4.  For   example, to delete the "preposition" request from earlier examples:   REQUEST:     DELETE /triggers/0 HTTP/1.1     User-Agent: example-user-agent/0.1     Host: dcdn.example.com     Accept: */*   RESPONSE:     HTTP/1.1 204 No Content     Date: Wed, 04 May 2016 08:48:22 GMT     Content-Length: 0     Content-Type: text/html; charset=UTF-8     Server: example-server/0.1Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                   [Page 38]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 2016   This would, for example, cause the collection of completed Trigger   Status Resources shown in the example above to be updated to:   REQUEST:     GET /triggers/complete HTTP/1.1     User-Agent: example-user-agent/0.1     Host: dcdn.example.com     Accept: */*   RESPONSE:     HTTP/1.1 200 OK     Content-Length: 105     Expires: Wed, 04 May 2016 08:49:22 GMT     Server: example-server/0.1     ETag: "-6938620031669085677"     Cache-Control: max-age=60     Date: Wed, 04 May 2016 08:48:22 GMT     Content-Type: application/cdni; ptype=ci-trigger-collection     {         "staleresourcetime": 86400,         "triggers": [             "https://dcdn.example.com/triggers/1"         ]     }6.2.6.  Error Reporting   In this example, the uCDN has requested pre-positioning of   "https://newsite.example.com/index.html", but the dCDN was unable to   locate metadata for that site:   REQUEST:     GET /triggers/2 HTTP/1.1     User-Agent: example-user-agent/0.1     Host: dcdn.example.com     Accept: */*Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                   [Page 39]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 2016   RESPONSE:     HTTP/1.1 200 OK     Content-Length: 486     Expires: Wed, 04 May 2016 08:49:26 GMT     Server: example-server/0.1     ETag: "5182824839919043757"     Cache-Control: max-age=60     Date: Wed, 04 May 2016 08:48:26 GMT     Content-Type: application/cdni; ptype=ci-trigger-status     {         "ctime": 1462351702,         "errors": [             {                 "content.urls": [                     "https://newsite.example.com/index.html"                 ],                 "description": "newsite.example.com not in HostIndex",                 "error": "emeta"             }         ],         "etime": 1462351710,         "mtime": 1462351706,         "status": "active",         "trigger": {             "content.urls": [                 "https://newsite.example.com/index.html"             ],             "type": "preposition"         }     }7.  IANA Considerations7.1.  CDNI Payload Type Parameter Registrations   The IANA is requested to register the following new Payload Types in   the "CDNI Payload Types" registry defined by [RFC7736], for use with   the "application/cdni" MIME media type.                 +-----------------------+---------------+                 | Payload Type          | Specification |                 +-----------------------+---------------+                 | ci-trigger-command    |RFC 8007      |                 | ci-trigger-status     |RFC 8007      |                 | ci-trigger-collection |RFC 8007      |                 +-----------------------+---------------+Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                   [Page 40]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 20167.2.  "CDNI CI/T Trigger Types" Registry   The IANA is requested to create a new "CDNI CI/T Trigger Types"   subregistry under the "Content Delivery Network Interconnection   (CDNI) Parameters" registry.   Additions to the "CDNI CI/T Trigger Types" registry will be made via   the RFC Required policy as defined in [RFC5226].   The initial contents of the "CDNI CI/T Trigger Types" registry   comprise the names and descriptions listed inSection 5.2.2 of this   document, with this document acting as the specification.7.3.  "CDNI CI/T Error Codes" Registry   The IANA is requested to create a new "CDNI CI/T Error Codes"   subregistry under the "Content Delivery Network Interconnection   (CDNI) Parameters" registry.   Additions to the "CDNI CI/T Error Codes" registry will be made via   the Specification Required policy as defined in [RFC5226].  The   Designated Expert will verify that new Error Code registrations do   not duplicate existing Error Code definitions (in name or   functionality), prevent gratuitous additions to the namespace, and   prevent any additions to the namespace that would impair the   interoperability of CDNI implementations.   The initial contents of the "CDNI CI/T Error Codes" registry comprise   the names and descriptions of the Error Codes listed inSection 5.2.7   of this document, with this document acting as the specification.8.  Security Considerations   The CI/T interface provides a mechanism to allow a uCDN to generate   requests into the dCDN and to inspect its own CI/T requests and their   current states.  The CI/T interface does not allow access to, or   modification of, the uCDN or dCDN metadata relating to content   delivery or to the content itself.  It can only control the presence   of that metadata in the dCDN, and the processing work and network   utilization involved in ensuring that presence.   By examining "preposition" requests to a dCDN, and correctly   interpreting content and metadata URLs, an attacker could learn the   uCDN's or content owner's predictions for future content popularity.   By examining "invalidate" or "purge" requests, an attacker could   learn about changes in the content owner's catalog.Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                   [Page 41]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 2016   By injecting CI/T Commands, an attacker or a misbehaving uCDN would   generate work in the dCDN and uCDN as they process those requests.   So would a man-in-the-middle attacker modifying valid CI/T Commands   generated by the uCDN.  In both cases, that would decrease the dCDN's   caching efficiency by causing it to unnecessarily acquire or   reacquire content metadata and/or content.   A dCDN implementation of CI/T MUST restrict the actions of a uCDN to   the data corresponding to that uCDN.  Failure to do so would allow   uCDNs to detrimentally affect each other's efficiency by generating   unnecessary acquisition or reacquisition load.   An origin that chooses to delegate its delivery to a CDN is trusting   that CDN to deliver content on its behalf; the interconnection of   CDNs is an extension of that trust to dCDNs.  That trust relationship   is a commercial arrangement, outside the scope of the CDNI protocols.   So, while a malicious CDN could deliberately generate load on a dCDN   using the CI/T interface, the protocol does not otherwise attempt to   address malicious behavior between interconnected CDNs.8.1.  Authentication, Authorization, Confidentiality, Integrity      Protection   A CI/T implementation MUST support Transport Layer Security (TLS)   transport for HTTP (HTTPS) as per [RFC2818] and [RFC7230].   TLS MUST be used by the server side (dCDN) and the client side (uCDN)   of the CI/T interface, including authentication of the remote end,   unless alternate methods are used for ensuring the security of the   information in the CI/T interface requests and responses (such as   setting up an IPsec tunnel between the two CDNs or using a physically   secured internal network between two CDNs that are owned by the same   corporate entity).   The use of TLS for transport of the CI/T interface allows the dCDN   and the uCDN to authenticate each other using TLS client   authentication and TLS server authentication.Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                   [Page 42]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 2016   Once the dCDN and the uCDN have mutually authenticated each other,   TLS allows:   o  The dCDN and the uCDN to authorize each other (to ensure that they      are receiving CI/T Commands from, or reporting status to, an      authorized CDN).   o  CDNI commands and responses to be transmitted with      confidentiality.   o  Protection of the integrity of CDNI commands and responses.   When TLS is used, the general TLS usage guidance in [RFC7525] MUST be   followed.   The mechanisms for access control are dCDN-specific and are not   standardized as part of this CI/T specification.   HTTP requests that attempt to access or operate on CI/T data   belonging to another CDN MUST be rejected using, for example,   HTTP 403 ("Forbidden") or 404 ("Not Found").  This is intended to   prevent unauthorized users from generating unnecessary load in dCDNs   or uCDNs due to revalidation, reacquisition, or unnecessary   acquisition.   When deploying a network of interconnected CDNs, the possible   inefficiencies related to the diamond configuration discussed inSection 2.2.1 should be considered.8.2.  Denial of Service   This document does not define a specific mechanism to protect against   Denial-of-Service (DoS) attacks on the CI/T interface.  However, CI/T   endpoints can be protected against DoS attacks through the use of TLS   transport and/or via mechanisms outside the scope of the CI/T   interface, such as firewalling or the use of Virtual Private Networks   (VPNs).   Depending on the implementation, triggered activity may consume   significant processing and bandwidth in the dCDN.  A malicious or   faulty uCDN could use this to generate unnecessary load in the dCDN.   The dCDN should consider mechanisms to avoid overload -- for example,   by rate-limiting acceptance or processing of CI/T Commands, or by   performing batch processing.Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                   [Page 43]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 20168.3.  Privacy   The CI/T protocol does not carry any information about individual end   users of a CDN; there are no privacy concerns for end users.   The CI/T protocol does carry information that could be considered   commercially sensitive by CDN operators and content owners.  The use   of mutually authenticated TLS to establish a secure session for the   transport of CI/T data, as discussed inSection 8.1, provides   confidentiality while the CI/T data is in transit and prevents   parties other than the authorized dCDN from gaining access to that   data.  The dCDN MUST ensure that it only exposes CI/T data related to   a uCDN to clients it has authenticated as belonging to that uCDN.9.  References9.1.  Normative References   [RFC1930]  Hawkinson, J. and T. Bates, "Guidelines for creation,              selection, and registration of an Autonomous System (AS)",BCP 6,RFC 1930, DOI 10.17487/RFC1930, March 1996,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc1930>.   [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate              Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119,              DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.   [RFC2818]  Rescorla, E., "HTTP Over TLS",RFC 2818,              DOI 10.17487/RFC2818, May 2000,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2818>.   [RFC3986]  Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R., and L. Masinter, "Uniform              Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax", STD 66,RFC 3986, DOI 10.17487/RFC3986, January 2005,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3986>.   [RFC5226]  Narten, T. and H. Alvestrand, "Guidelines for Writing an              IANA Considerations Section in RFCs",BCP 26,RFC 5226,              DOI 10.17487/RFC5226, May 2008,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5226>.   [RFC6707]  Niven-Jenkins, B., Le Faucheur, F., and N. Bitar, "Content              Distribution Network Interconnection (CDNI) Problem              Statement",RFC 6707, DOI 10.17487/RFC6707,              September 2012, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6707>.Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                   [Page 44]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 2016   [RFC7159]  Bray, T., Ed., "The JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) Data              Interchange Format",RFC 7159, DOI 10.17487/RFC7159,              March 2014, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7159>.   [RFC7230]  Fielding, R., Ed., and J. Reschke, Ed., "Hypertext              Transfer Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Message Syntax and Routing",RFC 7230, DOI 10.17487/RFC7230, June 2014,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7230>.   [RFC7231]  Fielding, R., Ed., and J. Reschke, Ed., "Hypertext              Transfer Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Semantics and Content",RFC 7231, DOI 10.17487/RFC7231, June 2014,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7231>.   [RFC7232]  Fielding, R., Ed., and J. Reschke, Ed., "Hypertext              Transfer Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Conditional Requests",RFC 7232, DOI 10.17487/RFC7232, June 2014,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7232>.   [RFC7525]  Sheffer, Y., Holz, R., and P. Saint-Andre,              "Recommendations for Secure Use of Transport Layer              Security (TLS) and Datagram Transport Layer Security              (DTLS)",BCP 195,RFC 7525, DOI 10.17487/RFC7525,              May 2015, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7525>.   [RFC8006]  Niven-Jenkins, B., Murray, R., Caulfield, M., and K. Ma,              "Content Delivery Network Interconnection (CDNI)              Metadata",RFC 8006, DOI 10.17487/RFC8006, December 2016,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8006>.9.2.  Informative References   [CBOR-CDDL]              Vigano, C. and H. Birkholz, "CBOR data definition language              (CDDL): a notational convention to express CBOR data              structures", Work in Progress,draft-greevenbosch-appsawg-cbor-cddl-09, September 2016.   [RFC7336]  Peterson, L., Davie, B., and R. van Brandenburg, Ed.,              "Framework for Content Distribution Network              Interconnection (CDNI)",RFC 7336, DOI 10.17487/RFC7336,              August 2014, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7336>.   [RFC7337]  Leung, K., Ed., and Y. Lee, Ed., "Content Distribution              Network Interconnection (CDNI) Requirements",RFC 7337,              DOI 10.17487/RFC7337, August 2014,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7337>.Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                   [Page 45]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 2016   [RFC7736]  Ma, K., "Content Delivery Network Interconnection (CDNI)              Media Type Registration",RFC 7736, DOI 10.17487/RFC7736,              December 2015, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7736>.   [RFC7975]  Niven-Jenkins, B., Ed., and R. van Brandenburg, Ed.,              "Request Routing Redirection Interface for Content              Delivery Network (CDN) Interconnection",RFC 7975,              DOI 10.17487/RFC7975, October 2016,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7975>.Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                   [Page 46]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 2016Appendix A.  Formalization of the JSON Data   This appendix is non-normative.   The JSON data described in this document has been formalized using   the CBOR Data Definition Language (CDDL) [CBOR-CDDL] (where "CBOR"   means "Concise Binary Object Representation"), as follows: CIT-object = CIT-command / Trigger-Status-Resource / Trigger-Collection CIT-command ; use media type application/cdni; ptype=ci-trigger-command = {   ? trigger: Triggerspec   ? cancel: [* URI]   cdn-path: [* Cdn-PID] } Trigger-Status-Resource ; application/cdni; ptype=ci-trigger-status = {   trigger: Triggerspec   ctime: Absolute-Time   mtime: Absolute-Time   ? etime: Absolute-Time   status: Trigger-Status   ? errors: [* Error-Description] } Trigger-Collection ; application/cdni; ptype=ci-trigger-collection = {   triggers: [* URI]   ? staleresourcetime: int ; time in seconds   ? coll-all: URI   ? coll-pending: URI   ? coll-active: URI   ? coll-complete: URI   ? coll-failed: URI   ? cdn-id: Cdn-PID } Triggerspec = { ; seeSection 5.2.1   type: Trigger-Type   ? metadata.urls: [* URI]   ? content.urls: [* URI]   ? content.ccid: [* Ccid]   ? metadata.patterns: [* Pattern-Match]   ? content.patterns: [* Pattern-Match] }Murray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                   [Page 47]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 2016 Trigger-Type = "preposition" / "invalidate"    / "purge" ; seeSection 5.2.2 Trigger-Status = "pending" / "active" / "complete" / "processed"    / "failed" / "cancelling" / "cancelled" ; seeSection 5.2.3 Pattern-Match = { ; seeSection 5.2.4   pattern: tstr   ? case-sensitive: bool   ? match-query-string: bool } Absolute-Time = number ; seconds since UNIX epoch (Section 5.2.5) Error-Description = { ; seeSection 5.2.6   error: Error-Code   ? metadata.urls: [* URI]   ? content.urls: [* URI]   ? metadata.patterns: [* Pattern-Match]   ? content.patterns: [* Pattern-Match]   ? description: tstr } Error-Code = "emeta" / "econtent" / "eperm" / "ereject"    / "ecdn" / "ecanceled"  ; seeSection 5.2.7 Ccid = tstr ; seeRFC 8006 Cdn-PID = tstr .regexp "AS[0-9]+:[0-9]+" URI = tstrMurray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                   [Page 48]

RFC 8007                CDN Interconnect Triggers          December 2016Acknowledgments   The authors thank Kevin Ma for his input, and Carsten Bormann for his   review and formalization of the JSON data.Authors' Addresses   Rob Murray   Nokia   3 Ely Road   Milton, Cambridge  CB24 6DD   United Kingdom   Email: rob.murray@nokia.com   Ben Niven-Jenkins   Nokia   3 Ely Road   Milton, Cambridge  CB24 6DD   United Kingdom   Email: ben.niven-jenkins@nokia.comMurray & Niven-Jenkins       Standards Track                   [Page 49]

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